Dear Steve, I receive your thanks with much appreciation. As you will have guessed, I am putting all of myself into those postso, in a sense, if you don't like the posts, you probably won't like me. To get a review like this oneright after the delightful piece by raunchydogmakes Canada seem all the livelier. No, it means something that there are persons who actually read through those long postsand insist the process is worth it. This just might even add a few years to my life, after that expatriate Holland guy threw his shoe at me.
George was more surprised, however, than I was. And I take notice of those words: Intriguing and enlightening. And I must say I am more inclined to go along with this adjudication than the one from Amsterdam. You see, more of the feeling of the person that you are comes through in this than the real feeling of Holland guy comes through his anti-Robin postshis true feelings come to the fore in his loyalty to Curtismy dialectic opponent. Thanks, Steve. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "seventhray1" <steve.sundur@...> wrote: > > > Ditto on that. Sending my thanks to both of them for an intriguing and > enlightening discussion. > > > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "raunchydog" <raunchydog@> > wrote: > > I've been quietly lurking, reading most of Curtis and Robin's posts. > It's a lot to wade through but it's worth the effort. Their conversation > invites me to get in synch with their thought processes and experience > the unfolding of their deeply felt, yet, uniquely intellectual > approaches to reality. The brain power between them could light up a > city. > > > > The only sport my Dad enjoyed watching on TV was boxing, so very early > on I learned to cheer evenly matched opponents. Busker Boy Curtis in > Boxer-Blue shorts vrs. Fancy Pants Robin in Cardinal Red pantaloons are > evenly matched heavy weights. Jabs, hooks, one-two punches, he's up, > he's down and so far it's a draw! Thanks for tickets to ring-side, guys. > Ding! > > >